Saturday, July 30, 2011

Mary Model of Virtue –Obedience

(Sharing at the Novena to Our Mother of Perpetual Help on 30 July 2011)

Mary’s response to God’s call is a Perfect “Yes” after a reflective silence and her question asking for further clarification. She gives her consent to the Lord’s invitation: “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord, may it be done to me according to your word. Mary wholeheartedly embraces the divine plan. To understand the simplicity and depth of Mary’s response, we have to reflect on it in detail.  Her response consists of two parts that imply and complement each other.

“Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord” which is Mary’s Ecce that expresses her total availability to serve the Lord. Mary offered herself as the “handmaid of the Lord”.  The word “handmaid is a term that indicates an unlimited generosity, an expression of ardent love of God’s will, the responsible love of a mature personality.’ By calling herself “a servant of the Lord” Mary expresses her availability to place herself unreservedly at the service of the Lord and His salvific plan. Mary was fully aware that her vocation to be the mother of the Saviour was God’s unmerited gift to her, that she was not at all worthy of it.  But the Lord had “looked upon the lowliness of his servant and therefore she would place herself at His service. As stated in the Lumen Gentium,(LG 56) “she devoted herself totally, as a handmaid of the Lord, (emphasis by sharer) to the person and work of her Son, under and with Him,… serving the mystery of redemption”. Mary takes her place within Christ’s Messianic service. Therefore to be called means fundamentally to serve God’s plan of salvation like Mary.  Mary’s attitude was by fixing her eyes always on the Lord in order to serve Him unconditionally.  Mary’s humble service reminds consecrated persons that they are no master of their vocation, but only servants whom the Master has entrusted with a special mission. Together with Mary, the handmaid of the Lord, they are called to partake in the salvific mission of Jesus, the “servant of the Lord” who did not come to be served, but to serve. We are reminded of the Lord’s and His mother’s utter humility.

Mary’s Fiat is by joyously consenting to co-operate in God’s salvific plan.  We have to know that the “fiat” of Mary at the Annunciation, “genoito” in Greek, expresses “a joyous desire to”; never a resignation or a constraining submission before something burdensome or painful.  It is rather a joyous desire to collaborate with what God foresees for her.  It is the joy of total abandonment to the good will of God.

Throughout history, man is called by God to co-operate in His plan of salvation, and the former has responded in various ways. Among those called, however, no one has ever given such a perfect and complete response as the Blessed Virgin Mary. Her “fiat” not only sums up and perfects the manifold responses given to God’s call, but it is also the sublime model of response to this call.  (Source: “What you should know about Mary by Charlene Altemose, MSC)

God comes to us not in the dramatic way the angel comes to Mary, but in those deep-felt inspirations, in our quiet, in our listening to the promptings of God’s grace within. God calls each of us to a certain task and, like Mary, we are to be conformed to the divine will. We too need to discern, need to question and need to be open for “impossible possibilities” for which only God has the solution.

Mary’s Annunciation challenges us to consider our own annunciations. Although no angel speaks to us, God does send those who announce God’s will for us. It may be a knock on the door from a needy neighbor; it may be the cry of someone asking us for a favour; it may be the demands and obligations of our job or state of life urging us to complete what we have begun; it may be a prompting deep in our heart that inspires and guides us. No matter what God asks of us, we need only look to Mary for guidance and the example of doing God’s will most perfectly.

In Mark 3:34-35, Jesus’ reply was, “ Whoever does the will of God is my brother, sister and mother”  .  In Luke 11:27-28, a woman cried out with a blessing for Jesus’ mother and Jesus’ response to that cry was, “Blessed rather are those who hear the Word of God and obey it”.

Mary shows us how to prioritise the details of life, always pursuing the will of God, with no personal gain in mind.


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